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Clarke, Anthony; Collins, John B. – Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 2004
This study explores Carl Glickman's widely used Supervisory Belief Inventory (SBI). The inventory is presented in his text Supervision of Instruction: A Developmental Approach. The text suggests that the inventory is able to discern with some accuracy a teacher's or administrator's preference for one of three supervisory approaches--directive,…
Descriptors: Measures (Individuals), Supervisory Methods, Cooperating Teachers, Supervisors
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Shkedi, Asher – Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 1995
Summarizes results of a study of 43 Israeli teachers' reactions to teachers' curriculum guides. Fewer than half the teachers interviewed made significant use of guides. Authors' intentions, as set forth in these guides, do not reach the teaching community and are felt to convey alienation, distance, arrogance, and lack of respect. Teachers did not…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Curriculum Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries
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Van den Berg, Rudolf; Sleegers, Peter; Geijsel, Femke – Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 2001
Reports results of an evaluation of a 2-year support program for implementing adaptive teaching (individualized instruction) in Dutch elementary schools. Teachers perceived working with personal action plans and cooperating with colleagues as positive activities. Most teachers also experienced sufficient support from school leaders. (Contains 23…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Foreign Countries, Individualized Instruction, Instructional Improvement
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Merryfield, Merry M. – Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 1994
Describes a year-long study exploring how student characteristics shaped their teachers' instructional decision making in world-history/global-education classes. Teachers were sensitive to racial, ethnic, religious, or gender differences; linked content to students' local environment; were concerned about gaps in student understanding and…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Global Approach, Influences, Multicultural Education
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Zepeda, Sally J.; Ponticelli, Judith A. – Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 1998
Surveyed 114 teachers regarding their supervisory needs, wants, and expectations. Writing exercises revealed teachers' perceptions of best and worst experiences and of administrator behaviors. Respondents viewed "best" supervision as validation, empowerment, visible presence, coaching, and professionalism vehicle and "worst"…
Descriptors: Administrator Behavior, Elementary Secondary Education, Surveys, Teacher Administrator Relationship
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Ennis, Catherine D. – Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 1996
Summarizes a study exploring the effects of student confrontation on high school teachers' intended curricula. Examines the context of confrontation through 10 urban teachers' discourses. Teachers eliminated controversial content and even altered formal curricula to maintain control and avoid confrontation. Constructing a more meaningful learning…
Descriptors: Blacks, Context Effect, Hidden Curriculum, High Schools
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Trumbull, Deborah J. – Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 1987
Through a study of teachers resolving classroom dilemmas, a way of characterizing teachers' beliefs for fuller understanding of their practices is suggested. Examining a teacher's perspective as a dynamic complex of beliefs and assumptions demonstrates that successful change efforts must consider the perspective in its entirety. (CJH)
Descriptors: Beliefs, Elementary Secondary Education, Instructional Improvement, Perspective Taking
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Stenhouse, Lawrence – Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 1988
This article is a brief sketch of Lawrence Stenhouse's views on the relation of research to educational action. He argues that teaching is best conceived as a practical art form, and that the artist is a researcher whose inquiry expresses itself in performance of his or her art.(TE)
Descriptors: Creative Teaching, Educational Philosophy, Elementary Secondary Education, Innovation
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Hazi, Helen M. – Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 1994
Describes events surrounding grievances filed against a curriculum coordinator in a New Jersey school district from 1987 to 1989. Although most grievances were found in the supervisor's favor, teachers succeeded in questioning some practices and limiting others. Disentangling the supervision-evaluation knot is impossible; because supervision is…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Methods
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Kent, Susan I. – Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 2001
Summarizes a study following 16 teachers who had completed a graduate-level course in clinical supervision through their experiences as cooperating teachers paired with full-time student teachers. Although all cooperating teachers implemented some aspects of clinical supervision, they did not conduct clinical cycles often, due to time constraints.…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Graduate Study, Higher Education, Journal Writing
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Lewis, Mary E. – Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 1988
This study was conducted to learn why teachers continue to use a nutrition education innovation that was implemented by 21 teachers over three years. An ex post facto design was used to assess the significance of three implementation variables: the teacher, internal support, and external support. Results suggest teacher perceptions of the…
Descriptors: Adoption (Ideas), Change Strategies, Educational Innovation, Elementary Secondary Education
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Smyth, John – Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 1988
Asserts that teachers must form collaborative alliances and nonevaluative dialogue to regain control over their own professional development. The empowering potential of Robert Goldhammer's and Morris Cogan's original conceptions of clinical supervision have been distorted through the process of redefinition by vested interests to a form of…
Descriptors: Clinical Supervision (of Teachers), Critical Thinking, Educational Trends, Elementary Secondary Education
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O'Donoghue, Thomas A. – Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 1994
Describes restructuring in a Western Australian school district. Provides background information and summarizes findings of a case study exploring what primary teachers thought about the restructuring of their work. The 60 teachers interviewed generally thought the restructuring process negatively influenced their curriculum work. Teachers felt…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Curriculum Development, Educational Innovation, Elementary Education